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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Taylor v The Queen (Jamaica) [2013] UKPC 8 (14 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/8.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 104, [2013] 1 WLR 1144, [2013] 2 Cr App R 18, [2013] Crim LR 844, [2013] UKPC 8 |
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[2013] UKPC 8
Privy Council Appeal No 0039 of 2011
JUDGMENT
Bonnett Taylor (Appellant) v The Queen (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Jamaica
before
Lord Hope
Lord Kerr
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
Sir John Chadwick
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD HOPE
giving the majority judgment
ON
14 March 2013
Heard on 11 December 2012
Appellant Michael Birnbaum QC John McLinden QC Malcolm Birdling (Instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) |
Respondent Howard Stevens QC (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
LORD HOPE:
The issues
Mrs Hartley
The juror
"Decide this case on the evidence and only on the evidence. Do not be influenced by anything that you might have been told by anyone, whether by some fellow member of the jury that sat or are sitting with you about some prior knowledge or feeling or view. That is unimportant, and if you act upon that justice will have miscarried because that is not evidence.
I hope that I am making myself absolutely clear that it is the evidence and only the evidence in this case that you have heard that you are entitled to act upon, and determine. Having looked at the evidence, examined it, weighed it, determine what the facts are and ultimately what your verdict is, after applying the law that I will give you to the facts that you find proved."
"… when [the jurors] arrive in court they should be told the name or names of the accused whose case is to be tried. They should be reminded at that stage that if they know the accused they should make this known to the clerk. But it would be advisable for them also to be told the name of the complainer or of anyone else who is sufficiently important to the case to have been named in the charge or charges in the indictment. This simple step should ensure that, so far as reasonably practicable, the potential jurors are made aware of the names of all those persons knowledge of whom might give rise to the suspicion of prejudice."
He went on to say that there will be an opportunity, when the jury has been empanelled and the jurors are ready to try the case, for the judge to remind them that, if they feel that there is any reason why they should not serve on the jury, they should inform the court of this fact immediately. This is a matter for the discretion of the trial judge, but if he thinks it desirable to do so it would be appropriate to give the jurors an opportunity by means of a brief adjournment to act on his directions before the evidence is led.
Sentence
Conclusion
LORD KERR : (DISSENTING)
"Article 6 of the ECHR guarantees a person a right to a fair trial in the determination of a criminal charge … The first question which arises in the context of criminal appeals is whether a conviction at the end of a trial which fails to match up to the requirements of article 6 can ever be anything other than unsafe. It is submitted that the answer must be in the negative, and that section 3 of the Human Rights Act 1998... obliges the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords to 'read and [give] effect to' the word 'unsafe' so as to include any conviction resulting from such a trial. Strong support for this approach is to be found in R v A (No. 2) [2002] 1 AC 45...where Lord Steyn observed (at para 38) that it was well-established that the right to a fair trial was absolute in the sense that a conviction obtained in breach of it cannot stand. See also R v Forbes [2001] 1 AC 473, HL: R v Togher [2001] 3 All ER 463, CA (if a defendant has been denied a fair trial, it would be almost inevitable that the conviction would be regarded as unsafe); Randall v The Queen [2002] 1 WLR 2237, PC (right to a fair trial is absolute, and there would come a point when departure from good practice was so gross, or so persistent, or so prejudicial, or so irremediable that an appellate court would be bound to condemn a trial as unfair and quash the conviction as unsafe, however strong the grounds for believing the defendant to have been guilty); and Bernard v State of Trinidad and Tobago [2007] 2 Cr App R 22, PC (where a trial had been vitiated by irregularity, the strength of the evidence would only be relevant to the issue of whether the trial had been fair if the irregularity was an incorrect admission of evidence; in cases of procedural irregularity, however, the approach should be to weigh the seriousness of the defects; the trial may still have been fair if they were minor, but if they were sufficiently serious, the trial would have been unfair, however strong the evidence (Randall v The Queen ante, considered)). However, the recent decisions of the Supreme Court in Mclnnes (Paul) v HM Advocate [2010] HRLR 17, and Allison (Steven Edward) v HM Advocate [2010] HRLR 16, tend to undermine this approach. Aspects of the decision in Mclnnes, in particular, are likely to lead to confusion. First, it was said that there can be a violation of article 6 without the trial as a whole being unfair (see per Lord Hope of Craighead (at para 19, 20). Lord Rodger of Earlsferry (at para 30), and per Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood (at para 39)). Secondly, it was said that a trial will only be unfair as a whole if there is a real possibility that the verdict would have been different had the error not occurred (per Lord Hope of Craighead (at paras 20, 23, per Lord Rodger of Earlsferry (at para 30, and per Lord Brown (at para 35)).
"…if the court is satisfied, despite any misdirection of law or any irregularity in the conduct of the trial or any fresh evidence, that the conviction is safe, the court will dismiss the appeal. But if, for whatever reason, the court concludes that the appellant was wrongly convicted of the offence charged, or is left in doubt whether the appellant was rightly convicted or not, then it must of necessity consider the conviction unsafe" (emphasis added)
"[The House of Lords] in Stafford v Director of Public Prosecutions [1974] AC 878 were right to reject the submission of counsel that the Court of Appeal had asked the wrong question by taking as the test the effect of the fresh evidence on their minds and not the effect that that evidence would have had on the mind of the jury ([1974] AC 878 at 880). It would, as the House pointed out, be anomalous for the court to say that the evidence raised no doubt whatever in their minds but might have raised a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury. I am not persuaded that the House laid down any incorrect principle in Stafford, so long as the Court of Appeal bears very clearly in mind that the question for its consideration is whether the conviction is safe and not whether the accused is guilty. But the test advocated by counsel in Stafford and by Mr Mansfield in this appeal does have a dual virtue to which the speeches I have quoted perhaps gave somewhat inadequate recognition. First, it reminds the Court of Appeal that it is not and should never become the primary decision-maker. Secondly, it reminds the Court of Appeal that it has an imperfect and incomplete understanding of the full processes which led the jury to convict. The Court of Appeal can make its assessment of the fresh evidence it has heard, but save in a clear case it is at a disadvantage in seeking to relate that evidence to the rest of the evidence which the jury heard. For these reasons it will usually be wise for the Court of Appeal, in a case of any difficulty, to test their own provisional view by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial jury to convict. If it might, the conviction must be thought to be unsafe."
"31 In the Board's view the law is now clearly established and can be simply stated as follows. Where fresh evidence is adduced on a criminal appeal it is for the Court of Appeal, assuming always that it accepts it, to evaluate its importance in the context of the remainder of the evidence in the case. If the court concludes that the fresh evidence raises no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused it will dismiss the appeal. The primary question is for the court itself and is not what effect the fresh evidence would have had on the mind of the jury. That said, if the court regards the case as a difficult one, it may find it helpful to test its view 'by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial jury to convict': R v Pendleton [2002] 1 WLR 72 , 83, para 19. The guiding principle nevertheless remains that stated by Viscount Dilhorne in Stafford's case [1974] AC 878, 906, and affirmed by the House in R v Pendleton:
'While ... the Court of Appeal and this House may find it a convenient approach to consider what a jury might have done if they had heard the fresh evidence, the ultimate responsibility rests with them and them alone for deciding the question [whether or not the verdict is unsafe].'
32 That is the principle correctly and consistently applied nowadays by the criminal division of the Court of Appeal in England-see, for example, R v Hakala [2002] EWCA Crim 730, R v Hanratty, decd [2002] 3 All ER 534 and R v Ishtiaq Ahmed [2002] EWCA Crim 2781. It was neatly expressed by Judge LJ in R v Hakala, at para 11, thus:
'However the safety of the appellant's conviction is examined, the essential question, and ultimately the only question for this court, is whether, in the light of the fresh evidence, the convictions are unsafe.'
"… the issue of guilt is one for a properly informed and directed jury, not for an appellate court. Secondly, the issue is not whether there is or was evidence on which a jury could reasonably convict but whether there is or was evidence on which it might reasonably decline to do so …"
"At about 9.30pm going to ten, I was at my home along with my husband, Lascelles Hartley o/c 'Bigga', my four children and two grand children and a friend of the family, Aubin Grey o/c "Skinner". I heard two explosions sounding like gun shots."